Showing posts with label William Bruce Ellis Ranken. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William Bruce Ellis Ranken. Show all posts

Friday, August 19, 2016

William Bruce Ellis Ranken Part II

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William Bruce Ellis Ranken 1902

Well-born and educated at Eton, and eventually Slade, Ranken had an idyllic childhood living in vast estates in both Scotland and England. In 1907 he moved to Chelsea. This put Ranken in the milieu of the Edwardian aesthetes. Gay photographer Baron De Meyer and his wife, Olga, became close friends. He was mentored by gay artist John Singer Sargent.
Adolph de Meyer
Sargent, John SInger (1856-1925) - Self-Portrait 1907 
Of the artist's many patrons and friends, many were gay, lesbian, or bisexual. Some of those included composer Cole Porter; writer Violet Keppel Trefusis, the lover of Vite Sackville-West; Anne Morgan, daughter of the famous financer; decorator Elsie de Wolfe, Morgan's lover; the dynamic literary agent Elizabeth Marbury, also de Wolfe's lover; Henry Davis Sleeper, the collector; life-long companion and friend, actor Ernest Thesiger, who married Ranken's sister Janette at his behest; and most significantly, William Lygon, Earl Beauchamp, and his middle son, the Honorable Hugh Lygon, the model for Sebastian Flyte, the catalyst in Evelyn Waugh's most famous novel, Brideshead Revisited.
Self portrait 

William Bruce Ellis Ranken

Scottish painter William Bruce Ellis Ranken (1881–1941) photographed by Baron Adolph de Meyer, ca. 1907.

William Bruce Ellis Ranken (1881–1941) was an Edwardian aesthete, born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1881 to Robert Burk Ranken, a wealthy and successful lawyer, and his wife Mary. He attended Eton College and then proceeded to The Slade School of Art under the tutelage of Henry Tonks. A fellow student was the actor Ernest Thesiger, who became a lifelong friend; was painted by Ranken in 1918, and married Ranken's sister Janette in 1917.
1904
Ranken's first exhibition in 1904 at the Carfax Gallery in London was well-received by artists and art critics.
Isabella Stewart Gardner(1888), by John Singer Sargent.
He befriended Wilfrid Gabriel de Glehn and John Singer Sargent. At the outbreak of World War One, William was living in his studio in Chelsea, a short distance from Sargent's studio, with whom he may have ventured to America during the war years.